Impact of an Idealist: Ela Bhatt

Similar documents
POINT OF VIEW Freedom Struggle Has to Go On...

MINDFULNESS, SELF-CARE AND THE LAW

Remarks by. H.E. Ambassador John W. Ashe President of the 68 th Session of the United Nations General Assembly. New York 2 October 2013

AT the outset let me congratulate the Institute of Oriental Philosophy

GOAL 2 - END HUNGER, ACHIEVE FOOD SECURITY AND IMPROVED NUTRITION AND PROMOTE SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE

Chapter 24 Physical Geography of South Asia The land Where Continents Collided

THE PRESBYTERIAN HUNGER PROGRAM

TAKE 25 HOURS AND CHANGE THE WORLD

Tool 1: Becoming inspired

Nanjing Statement on Interfaith Dialogue

Where Have All The Sisters

INDIA MICAH CHALLENGE. In the Beginning

Becoming an. Eco-Mentor. Leading Others to an Eco-Intelligent Lifestyle. Candia Lea Cole

OUR MISSION OUR VISION OUR METHOD

CAMPAIGN GUIDE. 50 years of solidarity! Table of Contents

Our Core Values 5 Our Strategic Focus Areas and Objectives 6 Growth in discipleship 9 Emphasis on Mission Awareness and Involvement 12 Education 14

Social Justice Priorities

DRAFT. Leadership Council Description

Journey Day 7 Wednesday

In the Name of God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

A Church Plant in Vizag, India

The UU Society for Community Ministries Code of Professional Practice Adopted December 31, 2004 Revised September 1, 2010

Inspiring Hope and Solidarity: A resource for Parishes and Religious Educators

Constitution II. MUTUAL EXPECTATIONS:

Grace Abounding! 1. Quoted from a response

Proposed Revisions to The Guide to Our Faith and Practice 27th day of eighth month, 2010

The Coming One World Religion - pt 2. The next group that we will examine is the United Alliance of Civilizations. The website for the...

Mahatma Gandhi and the Environment analysing Gandhian environmental thought

Presented at. Seminar and Site Visits August, Marc Tormo. Coffee Ideas!

Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada Congregational Mission Profile

THE CHURCH AND CHILDREN: VISION AND GOALS FOR THE 21ST CENTURY Policy Statement

PRAYER DIARY 1 June 13 August 2017

122 Business Owners Wisdom

UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST SUMMARY CHURCH PROFILE

COMMUNITY LIFE WORKSHOP

CONGREGATION/ MULTIPLE POINT PARISH/ ORGANIZAITON NAME CONG ID SYNOD TYPE OF MINISTRY SITE YEAR ORGANIZED

Opening Remarks. Presentation by Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia General Secretary, World Council of Churches

PRESENTER NOTES Please note:

Champions for Social Good Podcast

CONSTITUTION AVONDALE BIBLE CHURCH

The From Violence to Wholeness Workshop

True to Madiba's own inclinations, we are not here this evening to mourn. We are here to remember.

Ending Racial Inequality George W. Bush. Bush, G. W. (2000, July 10). Ending Racial Inequality. NAACP Annual Convention. Baltimore, MD.

South Asia Notes. Unit 10-3wks Test

PRESENTS. 5/30/2013 Bates Staff Retreat 1

CENTRE OF ISLAMIC BANKING AND ECONOMICS

Creating the Future World on Spaceship Earth

A SILENT REVOLUTION (EDUCATIONAL PHILOPSOPHY OF MAHATMA GANDHI)

Diversity with Oneness in Action

Laudato Si THE TWO GREATEST COMMANDMENTS & OUR PLANET

Excerpts from Laudato Si

INDIVIDUAL VOCATIONAL MISSIONARY SUPPORT APPLICATION

Text: John 6 Theme: God s banquet sustains us in life and death. Being Filled. This morning I have a table and chairs set up because we are

The Gandhi King Season for Nonviolence (SNV)

The Catholic intellectual tradition, social justice, and the university: Sometimes, tolerance is not the answer

Official Response Subject: Requested by: Author: Reference: Date: About the respondents

Step Thirteen: Humility

Justice, Peace, and Integrity of Creation

Family Life Education

Eco-Justice Ministries

3700 Maple Ln (C) Ovilla, Texas BIOGRAPHY

A Global Peace Initiative for Africa by Africa

Kazu Haga: The Creation of Our Beloved Community by Bela Shah

Knollwood Baptist Church 2014 Strategic Plan Overview August FINAL. Who We Are and Where We Are Headed

The Season for Non Violence Series All Ages Assembly 1/29/2017

DECLARATION OF THE CONTACT GROUP ON ROHINGYA MUSLIMS OF MYANMAR HELD ON THE SIDELINES OF THE ANNUAL COORDINATION MEETING 19 SEPTEMBER 2017

Project 1: Grameen Foundation USA, Philippine Microfinance Initiative

SAMPLE. Introduction. xvi

ADDRESS BY THE PRESIDENT OF INDIA, SHRI RAM NATH KOVIND AT INDIAN COMMUNITY AND FRIENDS OF INDIA RECEPTION

Committed. Committed. Vocal.

329. Wholeness 330. Willingness 331. Will Power 332. Wisdom 333. Worthiness

Mr. President, 2. Several of the themes included on the agenda of this General Assembly may be

Sat Sri Akaal, Assalaamu Alaykum, and welcome to everyone here! and sisters from the Sikh community.

Lectures on the Ideology of Mahatma Gandhi in the Context of Globalization

CONSTITUTION of HOME MORAVIAN CHURCH

Journey to Kathmandu: Sacred Gifts for a Living Planet. A Living Planet Campaign initiative

Global DISCPLE Training Alliance

Activism. Activism (noun): taking action to bring about political or social change

Catholic University of Milan MASTER INTERCULTURAL SKILLS Fourteenth Edition a.y. 2017/18 Cavenaghi Virginia

International Day for the Eradication of Poverty 17 th October

Did you know? Grace-Full Living. A resource from Women of the ELCA

Continuing Thoughts about Resilience and Caring: What We Can Learn from Military Veterans Robert Brooks, Ph.D.

Planning, Strategizing, Setting Goals and Organizing

Global Ministries Fellowship Africa Report

BY-LAWS OF Becoming One Outreach Ministries, Incorporated, A NOT-FOR-PROFIT CORPORATION

Allow me to offer some words to our Latin American sisters and brothers who may be challenged by English (just as we may be challenged by Spanish!

MAZU CULTURAL FESTIVAL AND CITY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN TAICHUNG

PRESBYTERIAN GIVING CATALOG STORIES OF IMPACT

YOUR LEGACY... THEIR FUTURE

KINGDOM LIVING. had been born into 90 years ago a time of innocence and good clean fun, a time of courtesy

A Smaller Church in a Bigger World?

It is because of this that we launched a website and specific programs to assist people in becoming soul centered.

Unit Two: Peacemakers and Nonviolence Lesson 2: Dorothy Day. Standards Addressed by Lesson: can exercise their rights (d).

DISCOVER YOUR VERB TALKING POINTS

Human Dignity and Solidarity Immigration Ministry. Week toolkit. building communities of welcome. January 6 12, 2019

Good morning! This is the day that the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in it.

Resolutions of ACC-14 relating to the Anglican Peace and Justice Network

our ƒabric each strand strengthens the whole Connecticut Conference United Church of Christ

COUPLE VOCATIONAL MISSIONARY SUPPORT APPLICATION

A People Called Out to Take Responsibility

Transcription:

Impact of an Idealist: Ela Bhatt One could attempt to describe Ela Bhatt with adjectives: soft-spoken, tenacious, compassionate, dedicated, principled, self-effacing. Or one could use nouns: lawyer, laborleader, social activist, banker, author, philanthropist. But all these words together still do not comprehensively encompass her visionary foresight, her inexhaustible energy, her unbending strength of purpose, and her unswerving commitment to the humane. Ela ben was born in Ahmadabad (India), and after training as a lawyer, she joined the legal department of the Textile Labor Association (TLA) and rose to head its Women s Wing at the age of 35. Ela ben saw first-hand that these women were forced to supplement their income by weaving, stitching, rolling cigarettes, selling fruits, etc. Since the law didn t protect women who worked from home, they were routinely oppressed by money-lenders, employers and officials. Ela ben s sphere of interaction increased to a group of migrant women working as cart-pullers, as well as women head-loaders who carried cloth merchandise to retail markets. Sitting with them on the steps of the warehouse, she listened to their tales of erratic wages, housing problems and exploitation. She knew that something had to be done. In December 1971, at a meeting held in a public park, the Self-Employed Women s Association (SEWA) was born, to organize women working in the informal sector, so as to use their collective strength to fight poverty. Ela ben served as its general secretary for the next 25 years, overseeing its growth to almost 2 million members across India, while having also expanded to Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and Pakistan. One of the early goals of SEWA was to financially help members to release them from the vicious cycle of debt and extortion. Due to illiteracy, formal banking facilities were out of reach. Banks required complex paperwork and were unable to sanction credit without sufficient collateral. We may be poor, but we are so many. Why don t we start a bank of our own, where 1 / 5

we are treated with the respect and service we deserve? So started the Mahila Sewa Cooperative Bank, with 4000 women contributing Rs. 10 each. Its goal was to provide small loans and financial counseling to women, and to help them set up their own small businesses. Today the bank has achieved complete financial viability and SEWA has extended its services to include healthcare, childcare, insurance, housing and legal aid all geared towards women s empowerment, and independence. In 1979 Ela ben became Co-founder and chairperson of Women s World Banking, an international microfinance organization established to investigate the conditions of poor women workers. In 1988 she was appointed to the Rajya Sabha where she chaired the National Commission on Self-Employed Women. In 2007 at the age of 74, Ela ben was invited by Nelson Mandela to join The Elders, a group of 12 international social activists, including past presidents, prime-ministers and Nobel Peace Laureates, with a mission is to promote human rights and world peace. Growing up during the freedom struggle, Ela ben had been greatly influenced by Mahatma Gandhi. Indeed, SEWA was founded on the Gandhian Principles of Satya (Truth), Ahimsa (Nonviolence), and Sarvadharma (inter-faith Integration). There is no place for hate in our struggle, she says. Nurturance comes naturally to human beings while exploitation is learnt behavior. I plead for building an economy of nurturance. Former US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton identified Ela Bhatt as one of her personal heroes, and honored her with the Global Fairness Initiative Award for helping more than a million poor women in India to a position of dignity and independence. Ela ben holds honorary doctoral degrees from Harvard, Yale and Georgetown Universities. And she was awarded the Padma Shri and the Padma Bhushan, India s highest civilian honors. Notwithstanding an agenda that could easily have filled far more than one lifetime, Ela ben has also found time to write 2 books: We are poor but so many: The Story of Self-Employed Women in India (2005) and Anubandh: Building Hundred-mile Communities (2015). Ultimately, Ela Bhatt could perhaps be most accurately described not by nouns or adjectives, but by oxymorons: A pragmatic idealist, a living legend, a gentle revolutionary, a reticent trailblazer. While her manner and parlance may be as subdued as a whisper, her accomplishments have had a powerful and resounding impact on millions of lives around the world. Her own life is proof that the face of extreme destitution can indeed be transformed, through compassion, selflessness and determination. Our time here may be limited, but if we use it well, it is more than enough. We had the privilege of being able to ask Ela ben a few questions. Below are edited excerpts of our conversation. THE ACROPOLITAN (TA): Your life s work has been to give women protection and dignity in a male dominated society. In what way would you define masculine and feminine roles to build harmonious communities? 2 / 5

ELA BHATT: When I refer to a male dominated society, I do not mean that all males are dominating, all the time. There are males in our homes that do facilitate women s growth. There are males who are dominating as a husband, but not as a father. Or they may dominate as an engineer, but not as a gardener. Having said so, I have underlined the need for a partnership between men and women. So you may ask, why then an all woman s bank and woman-only cooperatives of SEWA? My reply is that for a good partnership both partners have to be in many ways equal and mutual. And that is not possible if one partner is weak in any way. So we began to build women s strength and skills, not against men, but as themselves, and as partners to men, to build mutual solidarity. Work per se has no gender. And gender per se is no virtue. Planting trees is good work. Cutting trees is less so. Women teachers are welcome. Women terrorists are not. However, what I mean to stress is the feminine way. Let me elaborate. By this, I do not mean to exclude men from the equation, or assert that women have all the answers. Instead, I refer to a feminine way of thinking, which is often latently present in men too; this has to be celebrated, encouraged and nourished. Is the feminine way relevant for the future of society? I often ask this question to myself because SEWA represents the feminine. Closely linked to Nature, the feminine task is to hold, to be a catalyst that will allow people and groups to grow. The feminine way has no goals, but rather values the process of unfolding, and learns from it. The feminine has a different sense of time; the work will take whatever time is needed. And SEWA has taken over thirty years to reach a million women. It took 40 years to reach today s 1.9 million membership in SEWA. The feminine way looks at the whole group and tries to include the whole, waiting for those left behind; even if it means delaying the group, or the process. The goals are collective; the focus is on the progress of the community rather than the individual. I have observed over the years that the feminine way focuses on inclusion instead of domination, on process rather than endgoal, group over individual, and integration over fragmentation. For me Gandhi s way in many ways is a feminine way, deeply rooted in simplicity, nonviolence, dignity, and human values, which are relevant to our world today more than ever before. Gandhi ji had often acknowledged the lessons he learnt from women, particularly on simplicity; simplicity as a lifestyle guarantees the availability for the other. I feel we have to emulate this philosophy by looking for simple, easily understandable, practical and participative solutions to complex problems that is the feminine way. TA: Few people dare to step out of their own comfort zone in the face of systemic injustice. What was the inspiration behind your abundant altruism? Ela ben: Dare is not the right word. Not that we were afraid, but our approach is different. In most cases, we remain inside us, within our own context, and our own circumstances. Even as part of the middle class, where food, shelter, and education are taken care of, we still do not dare to step out. Or maybe we take a little step or two, but not far enough. 3 / 5

After independence in 1947, when we were stepping out of childhood and into youth, we wanted to step out, walk away, or even run, to build a free India that was fair to all and strive for economic freedom as citizens. The freedom struggle built thus needs to step out and reach out. Gandhiji showed the way to do it. We need to do what we can. And we can do a lot. What is altruism? I do not know. In SEWA, we did what was good for us and good for others. We created jobs, did not take away jobs. We prospered, but by cooperating and not conflicting. TA: The concept of an ELDER, not just in terms of age, but also as a treasure-trove of experience and wisdom, is a time-honored ancient tradition. Can you tell us about your experience as a founding member of Nelson Mandela s THE ELDERS? Ela ben: What an honour to meet and work with such leaders of our times! One learns a lot about many views, global forces, and the human capacity to make simple matters most complex. One learned: what is knowledge and what is wisdom, what is idea and what is action, and where each of these have their rightful place, and what are the limits of knowledge, wisdom, idea or action. In working with the Elders, their humility made me humble. And I learned even more the value of the power of poor people. I have seen and worked with poor women who have endless confidence in their wisdom and actions. The Elders enabled me see that the wisdom and action of poor women is universal, and cuts across cultures and crises and continents. I have seen and met the poor worldwide and I come to a sad conclusion: the poor in the world are not poor because they lack this or that, but because we as a society have decided to keep them poor. It is not that we don t know of solutions. We know all the means, ways, ideas, to enable the poor to come out of poverty. In fact, the poor themselves try to come out of their poverty all the time, and in all possible ways. But we push them back knowingly, or by overlooking them. TA: What is it then that society must do to inspire each person to become other-centric? Ela ben: We cannot be other centric unless we are me-centric. We know what we want, like, and wish for. But most of it is shaped by family, friends, schools and society and even more by what we see on TV or social media. And this is welcome, as one of the many sources. But this cannot determine our sense of me. We can better define our sense of me with new experiences, by reflecting on our actions, and the impact it has on us, our society, and Mother Nature. If we think more about us, we will find the others in us. Once we find us we can find others and reach out. Each one of us has a special call, inspiration, or a unique idea. By nature we all are equal, but we are also different and distinct. We know this truth since our childhood. This inner voice has to be listened to, and respected, and reflected upon. TA: Your book Anubandh: Building 100-mile Communities urges us to meet life s basic needs with goods and services produced no more than a hundred miles from where we live. Can you 4 / 5

Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) tell us why you consider it critical that the link between humans and their surroundings be restored? Ela ben: When I say 100 miles in my book, I refer to the notion of 100 miles. It can be 60 or 30 miles in some cases, and 300 or 600 miles in others. My main point in the book is to become better connected to what is near us, next to us; resulting in less carbon and water footprint due to long distances. We need to be mindful of what we use, where it comes from, and what we spend. Does it come from a small farmer or a home-based fruit grower on the riverbed? Or does it come from a corporate farm or orchard in some distant location? And where does our money go? To the vegetable vendor on the street, or the big Corporation that runs 1000 grocery stores countrywide? The reason we have to be mindful of these distances is that we are not only destroying the physical geography of rivers, forests, lakes and mountains, but also the human geography of producers and consumers, the social geography of neighbourhoods, and the economic geography of local markets and skills. In my book I have suggested the need to be aware of the impact of our actions on us, on our society, on our environment and on our ecosystem. If we destroy these ecosystems, we destroy ourselves as individuals, and as a human race, and as future generations. There is no reason to do so. Because as individuals, as a race, and as future generations, we have a lot to offer; far more than we have offered in the past million years, in order to move towards a creative society, a great civilization. I see this potential on daily basis. Today money is becoming more and more central in all we do. If this is the case, let money not determine what we do, or how we live. Instead, let us decide how we spend our money to do what we want, and live as we wish. In a highly monetized economy where everything, even a breath of fresh air, has a price, let us be in control of our money, rather than money be in control of us. 5 / 5